64 Friday, June 20, 1980 . THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Ptoneering Katsh Judaism-Islam Study Re-Issued Growing interest in Islam and the relationship of the Muhammadan codes to Judaism and Christianity lend special significance to the studies of the subject conducted by the eminent Hebraic scholar, Dr. Ab- raham Katsh, who recently retired from the presidency of Dropsie University. Dr. Katsh's "Judaism and Islam," now re-issued by Sepher Hermon Press, was the scholar's doctoral thesis when he earned his docto- rate from Dropsie in 1943. The volume was published in 1954 and is in revised form in its current edition. The heavy leaning upon both Judaism and Islam is indicated in Dr. Katsh's analysis which points to Muhammad's having origi- nally considered himself as the prophet of Judaism, not the founder of a new cult, and he formulated the theology of Islam after ac- ceptance by Jews and Chris- tians. Much acclaim has greeted Prof. Katsh's study of Islam and its im- portance was em- phasized in the foreword to the original volume, reproduced in the new edition, by his teacher at Dropsie, the late Prof. Solomon L. Skoss. Tracing the original study of the subject of Islam and the Jews by Prof. Ab- raham Geiger, Dr. Katsh outlines the differing views which judged Muhammad as having possessed knowl- edge of the Bible and Jewish traditions, and the opposing view that the acquain- tanceship was superficial aid rash in errors. Dr. Katsh makes a thorough study of the Koran as well as the background of Muhammad and his life and activities. Most definitive is his preface to the new edi- tion in which he provides a detailed definition of the Is- lamic influence. He states: "Like the Torah, the Koran represents the writ- ten law. As Judaism has the Talmud, so Islam also has an oral law (Hadith) based on recollections of Muham- mad's disciples as he preached the new faith. One can hardly exaggerate the importance of the role which the Koran played throughout the centuries in molding and transmitting the Islamic system. "In a number of ways, however, the Koran dif- fers from the Bible as scripture. The creators of the ,Hebrew Bible were the heirs of a long tradi- tion. In all the ancient scriptures the writings included were of varied authorship, generally anonymous, and stem- ming from different periods in the life of the ABRAHAM KATSH community whose Holy Book they comprised. "In each case it was the community feeling and judgment which decided what was to be included or excluded. Neither Amos, Jonah or Isaiah, for exam- ple, ever realized that their writings would be included in the scriptural canon. "The Koran, on the other hand, is the creation of one man and stems from only one period. While the bibli- cal writers could model themselves after a long line of earlier thinkers and teachers, Muhammad had no Arab model to follow. The Koran thus represented a new genre in Arabic liter- ature and thought. "Our study shows how Islam incorporated a series of beliefs and practices, many of which have their counterpart in Judaism. "The Shahadah, or af- firmation that "there is no God but Allah," is the Islamic counterpart of the Jewish Shema Yis- rael. Like Judaism, Islam does not recognize saints as mediators between the individual and his Creator. Like the Jews, the Muslim believes in the immortality of the soul and in personal ac- countability for his ac- tions here on earth. "Like Judaism, Islam de- nies the doctrines of origi- nal sin,and salvation. And like Jews, Muslims believe that each individual must follow a righteous path and secure atonement by im- proving his own conduct through sincere repentance. "The Koran is studded with passages extolling the importance and necessity of giving sadakah (alms) to the poor, the widowed, and the orphaned, and as in the Bible and the Talmud, this is regarded as an act of righteousness, not merely charity. According to the teachings of Islam, the prac- tical fulfillment of the belief in God's oneness, in Divine revelation, and in the exist- ence of the hereafter, is best achieved through prayer and in the service of human- ity through charity and philanthropy. "Every Muslim is ex- petted to make a pilgrimage to Mecca at least once in his lifetime (unless his is physi- cally or financially unable to do so). A pilgrim adds the honorary title Hajj to his name. "The Israelites were in- structed in the Bible to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem three times a year. After the First Temple was destroyed in 586 BCE and the Jews were no longer able to travel fo Jerusalem, the institution of the synagogue arose. The church and the mosque developed out of this in- stitution. Like the synagogue, the mosque is a house of worship with no images or figures, which are forbidden by the tenets of both Judaism and Islam. . "Where Islam stands quite alone is in its having elevated to the dignity of, a canonical obligation the duty of Jihad or 'Holy War.' As Ulrich Haa-rman has shown, 'the Jihad holds a privileged position in Is- lamic ethics . . . The 'house of Islam' was not only to be safeguarded but, if at all possible, to be expanded all over the world.' "Though Islam is far from being monolithic, and many sects hostile to each other have evolved, all followers of Muhammad share this hope of 'Islamizing' the non-Muslim world. "In general, three factors have historically char- acterized the position of Jews and Christians in the Islamic realm: (1) their status of tolerated outsiders and inferiors, (2) their sub- jection to special taxation, and (3) the autonomy under which they administered their own communal and religious' affairs. "Despite the concept of Jihad, however, JudaiF ----, and Islam shared lo _ periods of peaceful aria productive coexistence in past centuries. A study of the rise of Islam reve- als that just as Judaism made an impression upon the development of Islam, so did the latter have a considerable im- pact on the development of the Hebrew language and Jewish thought. "Prof. Bernard Lewis cites a letter which the noted Jewish scholar Ignaz Goldziher wrote to an Arab student: 'For the sake of your people and my people, I lived. When you return home, tell it to your brother.' " - Koranic commentaries, the Islamic Bible sources, Targumim as they relate to the Muhammadan Koran are in the numerous indices in the Katsh studies. —P.S. Black Bedouin Goat May Become New Source of Protein in Desert TEL AVIV — The desert desert food of inferior nutri- black Bedouin goat is a tional quality and drinking potentially copious milk water only once every four producer and can be de- days, better utilizing food veloped through modern and drink than any other desert farming technology domestic animal. Rated by the experts as a as a first-rate milk- providing domestic animal, "superior dairy animal" as well as a plentiful meat producing milk at the level source of protein, at a frac: (per body weight) of the tion of the feeding costs of Holstein cow, the largest milk producer in the world, today's cattle. A 10-year research study the black goat offers the undertaken by a Tel Aviv added advantages of being University team of suited to desert farming and zoologists found that the development of desert black goat, common to Mid- areas, and not requiring the dle Eastern deserts, is capa- expensive feed given to ble of thriving efficiently on cows. The black Bedouin goat's unique metabolism enables it to thrive on inexpensive wheat straw, too low in protein for other domes- tic animals, because it is capable of re-cycling re- sidual nitrogen (the es- sential element of pro- tein), which creates addi- tional digestible protein within the goat's stomach. This capacity is common to cud-chewing animals at a rate of 40 percent, but the black Bedouin goat is capable of recycling over 90 per- cent of its residual nitro- gen, enabling it to pro- duce copious amounts of milk, up to 10 percent of its body weight daily, even when its source of nutrition is limited and inferior. So flexible are black goats in food source, that the re- search was occasionally in- terrupted by the goats' munching on computer print-outs. The black Bedouin goat. The black Bedouin goat can consume over 40 per- cent of its body weight in water, discovered the Tel Aviv University scientists, and, because it can wait for sulting in plentiful milk four days before drinking production. again, can graze extensive - For use as a source of distances from water meat, the black Bedouin sources, enabling it to goat is distinctive in its utilize vast grazing areas high rate of twin births (about four times the area of (44 percent of all births) other grazing animals). and the rapid growth rate In ordinary mammals, of its kids. The young water consumption at even goat doubles its birth 20 percent of the body weight in 15-17 days, weight would result in compared to a period of bursting red blood cells and 18-23 days for sheep used endangering the animal's in meat production in life, but the black goat Mediterranean coun- stores water in its stomach, tries. gradually and safely dilut- Willi its favorable re- ing the blood stream and re- production and growth rate and its potential to produce approximately 22 kilog- rams (5 pounds) of meat per year per goat, the black Be- douin goat can serve as an important source of protein, in protein:hungry desert areas. Following the findings of the Tel Aviv University zoologists, Israeli scientists have begun examining and developing farming technology procedures necessary for raising black goats on a sophisticated ag- ricultural level. Israeli Farmers Applying Science Israel Government Press Service JERUSALEM — In 31 years the Israeli farmer has become the most innova- tive, the most successful and the world's best inten- sive husbandryman. The Israeli farmer pro- duces a bountiful harvest on poor land. On a quarter- acre, about the size of an av- erage city lot, Israeli far- mers routinely produce a crop worth $50,000. If an American tomato farmer grows 20 tons an acre, he pays costs and makes a bit. If he produces 30 tons an acre, he's made a real buck. If he grows 40 tons an acre, he gets his pic- ture in the paper: An Israeli tomato grower does 200-240 tons an acre, and it's routine. These dollar and ton- nage yields are for greenhouse growing, the most intensive kind of agriculture. The kibut- zim and the moshavim in the Negev Desert pro- duce their crops for the European and American winter markets, the sea- son when prices for pro- duce and flowers are at their highest. That's one of the reasons the Israeli farmer is so successful. There's a computer at Kibutz Yotvata near Eilat that, among other things, does the irrigation. Originally, its job was to turn the valves on and off at night.so no one, for security reasons, would have to go out in the fields. Everything could be controlled by the computer within the safety of the kibutz. Now the computer is amazingly sophisticated. Each field has a ten- sionometer in the soil that constantly measures the moisture. Each area has a gauge that tells wind direc- tion, wind speed and humid- ity. The computer- knows what is planted in each dunam and its stage of maturity. The operator punches up field D-31 which has a variety of Texas onion. 53 days old. The corn puter checks existip' moisture level, humic wind direction and spetu and figures that 53-day onions need 18 minutes of water. It automatically turns on and off the valves and maybe decides to inject a lit- tle fertilizer in the irriga- tion water. All auto- matically. "We call that computer either 'Wisdom' or 'Mis- tress'. Both words fit," says Hillel Gordium, secretary of Kibutz Yotvata. "Besides, it saves 25 percent of the water."